Baseball America Prospect Report - May 25, 2018

Alex Reyes, RHP, Cardinals. Reyes appears every bit ready to return to the majors. In his fourth rehab start since Tommy John surgery, Reyes pitched seven shutout innings with one hit allowed, one walk and 13 strikeouts for Triple-A Memphis against Oklahoma City. He retired his final 15 batters, including nine straight via strikeout at one point, which is a Pacific Coast League record. Since returning to the mound this month, Reyes has pitched 23 scoreless innings with seven hits allowed, seven walks and 44 strikeouts. He is eligible to come off the 60-day disabled list on May 28.

Zack Collins, C, White Sox: Collins reached base six times for Double-A Birmingham, going 3-for-3 with three walks. After a slow start, Collins is beginning to heat up and has elevated his slash line to .265/.447/.462 on the year.

Corbin Martin, RHP, Astros: Martin was a second-round pick last year who continues to outperform most of the first-rounders taken a head of him. Already at Double-A, Martin pitched 7.2 scoreless innings with two hits, no walks and nine strikeouts to keep Corpus Christi alive in a scoreless duel with Springfield. Martin improved to 3-1, 1.79 on the season and is holding opponents to a .151 average.

Matt Thaiss, 1B, Angels: Thaiss continued his power spike with his first two Triple-A home runs on Thursday, going 3-for-6 with two longballs for Salt Lake. The Angels' 2016 first-round pick has eight home runs in 43 games this year after hitting all of nine home runs in 133 games last season.

Andres Gimenez, SS, Mets: The precocious 19-year-old continues to hold his own in the difficult Florida State League, going 3-for-3 with three stolen bases to lead St. Lucie over Daytona. Gimenez is up to .287/.356/.441 with 15 steals in 18 attempts this year.

Brandon Dixon, 1B, Reds: Dixon got his first major league hit on Thursday, and decided it was so much fun he wanted more. Dixon went 3-for-4 with a double to lead the Reds to a 5-4 win over the Pirates, the first three hits of his career. The former College World Series hero and Pac-12 batting champion nearly made the Reds' 25-man roster out of spring training and hit .326/.371/.527 at Triple-A Louisville to earn his first callup. Now he has a shot to stick in the majors for good.